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� -.V '
The College News
VOL. XVIII, No. 16
WAYNE AND BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1932
Price, 10 Cents
Westminster Played
Out Says Miss Lee
Courageous Labor Government,
a New Foreign Policy, and
Tariff Solution Needed
MUST MOVE FORWARD
"Westminster, its glory, its hero-
ism, belong to the past, and will not
be revived if it is left in Conserva-
tive hands," said Miss Jennie Lee, for-
mer Labor M. P., in her talk in Good-
hart, Wednesday night. This glori-
ous past must serve as a guide,
though not a model for the future.
In the seventeenth century, the House
of Commons rose to the national im- (
portance which it has today through
its vital struggle with Charles I, dur-
ing which its speaker denied the
king's arbitrary power in these his-
toric words: "Your Majesty, I have
neither eyes to see, nor ears-to hear,
but as the House commands." To-
day different things are being strug-
gled for, but the abstract forces are
the same.
Labox-teaders have just as earn-
est convictions as the Opposition of
1642, and are as ready to risk their
worldly goods. In the seventeenth
century the selfish economic interests
of merchants plus the religious fac-
tor formed a terrific national force
which lead to the supremacy of the
British Empire and the House of
Commons. "We have now reached a
crisis when we cannot muddle along;
but once again we will see whether
(ireat Britain can' produce tftV type
of person who will hazard all, and
produce a like meeting of the eco-
nomic, the body, and convict-ion, the
soul."
"We feel.'* said Miss Lee, "that we
have these two elements: the torment
* of economic insecurity, not of a small
middle class, but of the broad masses
plus the spirit of the Labor move-
ment, which has grown because peo-
ple felt they were not getting a-square
deal, and saw an opportunity in the
Labor and Socialist movement." The
Labor Government of 1924 was form-
ed on a wave of popular feeling, and
destroyed in 1926 by its own timidity
in economic issues. This failure of
the Labor Party threw the people of
Great Britain into the arms of the
Conservatives, with whom tiny Baw
a chance of regaining former pros-
perity; but "that is not brave, as
We should look ahead to solve le-w
economic problems."
"Westminster is played out,*** said
Miss Lee. "unless Great Britain can
-end up a Labor Government more
courageous than those of the past.'
It cannot run back_ to the past, jiot
when other 'countries are going
CALENDAR
Thurs., Mar. 24, 4.30�A meet-
ing of the Undergraduate As-
sociation will be held in the
Common Room. Tea will be
served.
Fri., Mar. 25, 12.43�Spring va-
cation begins.
Mon., Apr. 4, U A. M.�Spring
vacation ends.
Sun., Apr. 10, 7.30�Rev. Dr.
James Gordon Gilkey, minis-
ter of South Congregational
Church, Springfield, Mass.,
will speak in Chapel.
Mon., Apr.,11, 8.20�Mr. Stuart
Chase, economist and author,
will speak in Goodhart Audi-
torium. His subject will be
"The End of an Epoch."
R. E. Jones Tells His
Theories on Theatre
Drama Presents Moments in
Life Ordered, Clarified,
and Intensified
Season's Biggest Game
Is Won by Bryn Mawr
First and Second Varsities
Beat Swarthmore Teams
to End Season
HAVE FULFILLED HOPES
SETS FIT CHARACTERS
To our own humble thoughts about
the theatre Robert Edmond Jones
added some vital inspiration in what
he has discovered for himself about
the drama. As a stage designer Mr.
Jones has seen our theatre in its
rawest state and found in it little
form, but tremendous life and energy.
Drama does not imitate life; it picks
out its significance and presents it
in an intensified form. Life is never
clear for longer than a moment at a
time, but goes on without order, hav-
In the ^Saturday morning game
against Swarthmore the Bryn Mawr
team proved that speed and accuracy
in shooting can overcome an advan-
tage in height. It took a whole quar-
ter for Bryn Mawr to come out of its
daze and for Longacre to get the Jump
from'the huge Swarthmore center.
The game started off with a rush
with a series of quick passes by
Swarthmore, but they soon lost the
ball when McCully intercepted a pass
from Sterling and sent it down to
CoI%#. Boyd feinted a run to the
line, but doubled back to receive the
pass from Collier over Longshore's
head. Boyd's easy shot was followed
by a pretty banked shot by Stubbs
for Swarthmore on a quick dribble
through Moore. The highlight of the
first quarter was the paaawork of the
Swarthmore forwards. One of their
best was from one of the centers to
a forward who, running back, re-
versed it again to the center, only to
receive it beneath the basket lor an
easy overhand shot.
In the second quarter the Bryn
Mawr guards seemed unable to get
their passes through, but continued
their excellent work of blocking long
passes and breaking up dribbles. Al-
though Longacre was unable to gel
the tip-off, her password and thai of
Remington, who practically ran cir-
cles around her tall but slower oppo-
Miss Park Announces
Foreign Fellowships
Different Atmosphere Will Open
Up New Possibilities to
Students Chosen to Go
33 CUM LAUDES IN '32
Stuart Chase to Talk on
American Economics
Can We Regain Our Prosperity
or is Present Depression "The
End of An Epoch"
ANALYZES IMPARTIALLY
ing neither a beginning, a middle or Bent, gave Boyd two close-in shots
and One to Collier from the foul line.
ahead, nor can it use its former tac-
tics in India, Manchuria, and Ge-
neva. "I see no future for West-
minster as a vital force, if we do not
change our foreign policy. Tariff also
requires bold solutions, but party
leaders simply quarrel about it. A
tariff wall will not cure unemploy-
ment any more than it has in Amer-
ica, and is just another attempt to.
muddle along." Attempts to change
in minor way are doomed to failure,
for only public control of the main
industries, imports, and exports would
be a basis for employment.
"The present struggle at Westmin-
ster is just as keen if not keener than
in the seventeenth century. The pow-
ers that be in Great Britain will not
(Continued on Page Two)
College News Election's
The College News takes great
pleasure in announcing the fol-
lowing elections:
Sallie Jones, '34, Editor-in-
Chief.
Clara Frances Grant, '34,
Copy Editor.
Janet Marshall, '33, News Ed-
itor.
Mabel Meehan, '33, Business
Manager.
Eleanor Yeakel, '33, Sub-
scription Manager.
an end. A play selects some, moment,
holds its clarity, begins, develops and
ends it in order, so that the function
of the theatre is "fixing our attention
on each moment of life as it passes."
In Btage designing one cannot just
invent a set by putting some furni-
ture in a room, but if one thinks about
the play, the set will grow complete
in one's mind. School* of design are
too apt to theorize about expression-
ism as a factor -cparalo from the
play itself. One must realize that as
the characters in the play have stories
attached to them, so the room they
live in must have the "shape of the
person who lives in it." Someone said
very truly that "a room gets full of
The Swarthmore team began to
realize that it had something to lace.
Although Seaman made two � long,
clean shots which never even touched
the rim, the momentary spurt was
checked bv .Moore when she jntor-
Oli Monday evening, April 11. Air.
Stuart Chase, noted economist and
author of ".Men and Machines......1'he
Nemesis of American Business," etc.,
will lecture in the auditorium of
Goodhart Hall. Mr. Chase will give
his audience answers to many (pies
lions of the moment.
Shall man be slave or master of
the machine'.' Where is the present
age leading US? We have achieved U
mechanical mastery almost undream
ed of. Man is master not only of the
sui face of the earth; of the sea. but
he has conquered air, time and space.
He has gone to the bottom of the
ocean and inside the earth. ,No bar-
rier seems too great for the man of
today to overcome. Telephone, tele-
graph, radio. Wireless, are at our
service. But are they at our serv-
icv'.' l�o the mechanical contrivances,
"Change in the most useful spur to
study that we have at our disposal,"
said Miss Park at chapel Friday
morning. Most of us are reluctant
scholars but manage somehow to fin-
ish the assigned reading and write
our reports. The desire for a prize
whips many students toward the goal,
as well as � strong inherent instinct
to advance. The most important
stimulus t�> learning, however, is'
change, as provided for by the For-
eign Fellowship. Although it is of-
ten difficult to study under shifting
conditions, a > different atmosphere
opens up new possibilities. As Dr. Flex-
ner said, "Foreign universities make
us use our wits." They awaken us
to fresh values and knock all shal-
lowness and immaturity out of us.
We are treated as independent and
learned scholars and come in contact
with foreign people, diets, and cus-
toms.
It was for the purpose of providing
this broader intellectual outlook that
the Delaware Foreign Student Plan
was evolved. The sophomores who
are to study at the Sorbonne next
year are: Jean $. Anderegg, Mary
K. Boyd, Halla Brown, Mary �"��.
(harlton, Margaret G. Dannenbaum,
Klizabeth Fain. Helen G. (Jill, Mar-
garet L. Haskell, Marion G. Mitch-
ell. Myra Little, of the Class of
1933, will join the group and take*
her junior year with them.
Although it is not until graduation
day that the name of the senior chos-
en as the Bryn Mawr European Fel-
low is announced, here is the list,
comprising one-third of the class, ot
those who now possess cum laude av-
erage-: Amelia .Margaret Alexand-
er-en. Helen Qraham Bell. Margaret
Eleanor Bradley, Monica Brice, Vir-
ginia Butterworth, Edith Ashworth
Byrne, Charlotte Beatrice Einsiedler,
Donita Ferguson, Josephine Could
cepted a long pass which resulted in I the inventions, the machines, w..H.
placing Boyd in a scoring position] for us -or we for them?
Her basket was soon followed by a in his answers to such question:
udeline shot of Collier's, which ended and the discussion -of sucB tinielj
the half with*a score of 20-10, Bryij subjects, Mr. Chaw wastes no. time' Gratoni Elizabeth Luciemay Hannah.
Mawr leading. f _''" theorizing. He is the practical , Alice '|,,.(, Hardenbergh, Elinor Rose
conomist, leading as through n won [ Hntneld, (Catherine McClelland, Ruth
derland of factB which seem almost K,,,,,v|es Milliken, Kate Louisa Mitch-
impossible. In his lecture-, covering j c]]( Harriet Lucy Moore. Gretchen
many years of careful research, ho | Bright Mm Her. .lane Marion Oppen-
I!i vn .Maw i
In the second half tin
team came to life and began to show
some of the excellent training which
they had made so evident in th<
Drexel game. The guards did some
human patterns," so thai designing I splendid work, and Boyd was in top
is composing "in human qualities as! ,-,�.,� Collier did not play her usual
well as in form and color." j .,t(.;1(|y shooting rjame, but did some
excellent paS8ing. Longshore's splen
neither attacks nor defends, but �u'>* huimer, Dorothea Eckfcldt Perkins,
mits a brilliant analysis of causi and . Florence Pettus, Elizabeth Pleasants,
Tin- more strongly an artist, wheth-
er writer or designer, feels the signifi-
cance of his play, the more vividly he
can make his audfefieC eoit,'Tso,
though we -cannot form a picture of
heaven, we see it i:i "Green Pasture
because Marc Connelly saw it so feel-
ingly in his imagination.
effect -with Suggestions as to tm
future.
T- his interest in our present prob
did guarding for Swarthmore pre-, lems, Mr. (has,- bring- not Shaw, Jane Elizabeth Sickles, Vir-
wmted Boyd THojii making many �f �"t'v�: v :'""' '"" "" "" ginia Herndon Sped. Patricia Hill
her famous back twists, but EnVscTu'c usiipl technieaTTraTaiug and a varied Stewart. Margreta Curtis Sw. n- a,
Self-Government Meeting
Makes New Amendments
At the meeting of the Seif-Govcra-
ment Association Thursday. March
1,7, it was voted that for an overnight
absence a^student shall have notified
her hostess of her intended arrival.
The resolution against climbing in or
out-of windows was omitted. A res
olution was passed to the effect that
students must be in by 10:30 and that
entering or leaving the ball alter
10.30 by any means other than the
front door shows flagrant disregard
of this regulation. Article XIII was
amended to stipulate that if a stu-
dent, after leaving the halls, finds
out before 10.30 that she wishes spe-
cial permission, she must telephone
for a member of the Board and* have
herself signed out; if a student after
10.30 finds that she is unavoidably
delayed, she must notify the Warden.
A motion that the hours for informal
dancing be changed from 12.15 to
2.00 was carried. To make the reso-
lutions conform more closely to the
purpose of the organization it was re-
solved that each member of the asso-
ciation is responsible for seeing that
(Continued on Page Two)
at the end of the second half ended
33-18, in favor of Bryn Mawr. Tip-
biggest game of the season bail beon
won!
The Bryn Mawr guards are to be
Congratulated for their work in the
second half. Seaman. Swarthmore'
high-scoring forward, was held to a
total of only six points for the whole
(i ',,ni ii.ii. d Mi. l '.i. ' 'I'in. i
expern nee
which enabli
write with "lllti
linn t<
rc?t ant
Eleanor George Renner, Alice Whit-
comb liider. Lucy Coburn Sanborn,
Enid Constance Saper, Ellen Hand
p ak and
authority.
His subject on April 11 will he
"The End of An Epoch?" Has Amer-
ica reached the end of her prosperity
formula'.' is the current depression
permanent or temporary'.' What do
we have to ilo to keep prosperity
-roing?
T3"-
pnee of ticket- for adults i-
$2.50'and for children and all stu-
Plans Progressing Brilliantly for May Day;
Low Prices and Special Trains for Guests*
The May Day Committee- which, as ^acation you should know certain
you all khQW, is composed or Mr. | facts which will Be contained ii. the
King, Miss Petts, Harriet Moore and | folder,
myself�wonders where the catch is
this year, because everything is going
so beautifully, and we hope that the
oatcb is not going to be the weather
or the sale of tickets.
About the weather, none of us can
do anything; but about the ticket sale
we can all do a great deal, and that
is what I want to ask you to help us
with during the vacation � not the
actual sale of tickets, but to so in-
terest people that when they get the
May Day folder, early in April, with
the great number of enclosures, they
will immediately fill in and return the
order for tickets. It has seemed im-
portant that before leaving for the
.he
2...0'
dents, in schools and in colleges, Si.all.
This is a 50-cent reduction on any
May Day admission price since 1900.
Grandstand seats will be sojd M in
1924 and 1��28 at 75 cents, and, while
they may be considered in the light
of a' luxury, yet, if it is a fine day.
the view of the dancing on the green
offered by the grandstand is well
worth this additional expenditure (and
please tell this to your friends and
family).
May Day will be given on Saturday,
May 7, rain or shine, from 2.30 until
(Continued on Pa*a TwoV
Florence Ely Taggart, Charlotte i'y-
'ler. Ann Mai lack We.-gai
l he following are :b fi How-hips
given to certain graduate students
who show great distinction in their
iiiosen iiek|s. to enable tin oi t" con-
tinue their efforts with the help ol
the resources offered by foreign unj-
vei>itic>: The Workman Fellow for
1932-33 i- Elizabeth Ross Foleyj ol
Hamilton. New York. (>bcrli>./ Col-
lege 1929; M. A Bryn Mawfc Col-
lege. I'.'-"". 6arom Woerishoffer Schol-
ar in Social Economy, Bsyn Mawr
College, 1929-30; Carola/Woerishof-
fer Fellow in Social Economy, 1930-
.11; and Grade Dodge /Fellow in So-
cial Economy, 1931-3JB. Miss Foley,
who is working on/a thesis dealing
with workers' education, will study
psychology under Professor Cyril
Burt at the University Of London,
and the methods and technique of the
great English settlements such as
Toynbee Hall, and the Cerman resi-
dent workers' schools.
The Mary E. Garrett: European
(Coafiiiued on 1'nge Throe >
Erratum
The article on the Glee Club
f* concert in The News of March
16 was specially contributed by
Miss Laura Richardson, Reader
in Music.

� -.V '
The College News
VOL. XVIII, No. 16
WAYNE AND BRYN MAWR, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1932
Price, 10 Cents
Westminster Played
Out Says Miss Lee
Courageous Labor Government,
a New Foreign Policy, and
Tariff Solution Needed
MUST MOVE FORWARD
"Westminster, its glory, its hero-
ism, belong to the past, and will not
be revived if it is left in Conserva-
tive hands," said Miss Jennie Lee, for-
mer Labor M. P., in her talk in Good-
hart, Wednesday night. This glori-
ous past must serve as a guide,
though not a model for the future.
In the seventeenth century, the House
of Commons rose to the national im- (
portance which it has today through
its vital struggle with Charles I, dur-
ing which its speaker denied the
king's arbitrary power in these his-
toric words: "Your Majesty, I have
neither eyes to see, nor ears-to hear,
but as the House commands." To-
day different things are being strug-
gled for, but the abstract forces are
the same.
Labox-teaders have just as earn-
est convictions as the Opposition of
1642, and are as ready to risk their
worldly goods. In the seventeenth
century the selfish economic interests
of merchants plus the religious fac-
tor formed a terrific national force
which lead to the supremacy of the
British Empire and the House of
Commons. "We have now reached a
crisis when we cannot muddle along;
but once again we will see whether
(ireat Britain can' produce tftV type
of person who will hazard all, and
produce a like meeting of the eco-
nomic, the body, and convict-ion, the
soul."
"We feel.'* said Miss Lee, "that we
have these two elements: the torment
* of economic insecurity, not of a small
middle class, but of the broad masses
plus the spirit of the Labor move-
ment, which has grown because peo-
ple felt they were not getting a-square
deal, and saw an opportunity in the
Labor and Socialist movement." The
Labor Government of 1924 was form-
ed on a wave of popular feeling, and
destroyed in 1926 by its own timidity
in economic issues. This failure of
the Labor Party threw the people of
Great Britain into the arms of the
Conservatives, with whom tiny Baw
a chance of regaining former pros-
perity; but "that is not brave, as
We should look ahead to solve le-w
economic problems."
"Westminster is played out,*** said
Miss Lee. "unless Great Britain can
-end up a Labor Government more
courageous than those of the past.'
It cannot run back_ to the past, jiot
when other 'countries are going
CALENDAR
Thurs., Mar. 24, 4.30�A meet-
ing of the Undergraduate As-
sociation will be held in the
Common Room. Tea will be
served.
Fri., Mar. 25, 12.43�Spring va-
cation begins.
Mon., Apr. 4, U A. M.�Spring
vacation ends.
Sun., Apr. 10, 7.30�Rev. Dr.
James Gordon Gilkey, minis-
ter of South Congregational
Church, Springfield, Mass.,
will speak in Chapel.
Mon., Apr.,11, 8.20�Mr. Stuart
Chase, economist and author,
will speak in Goodhart Audi-
torium. His subject will be
"The End of an Epoch."
R. E. Jones Tells His
Theories on Theatre
Drama Presents Moments in
Life Ordered, Clarified,
and Intensified
Season's Biggest Game
Is Won by Bryn Mawr
First and Second Varsities
Beat Swarthmore Teams
to End Season
HAVE FULFILLED HOPES
SETS FIT CHARACTERS
To our own humble thoughts about
the theatre Robert Edmond Jones
added some vital inspiration in what
he has discovered for himself about
the drama. As a stage designer Mr.
Jones has seen our theatre in its
rawest state and found in it little
form, but tremendous life and energy.
Drama does not imitate life; it picks
out its significance and presents it
in an intensified form. Life is never
clear for longer than a moment at a
time, but goes on without order, hav-
In the ^Saturday morning game
against Swarthmore the Bryn Mawr
team proved that speed and accuracy
in shooting can overcome an advan-
tage in height. It took a whole quar-
ter for Bryn Mawr to come out of its
daze and for Longacre to get the Jump
from'the huge Swarthmore center.
The game started off with a rush
with a series of quick passes by
Swarthmore, but they soon lost the
ball when McCully intercepted a pass
from Sterling and sent it down to
CoI%#. Boyd feinted a run to the
line, but doubled back to receive the
pass from Collier over Longshore's
head. Boyd's easy shot was followed
by a pretty banked shot by Stubbs
for Swarthmore on a quick dribble
through Moore. The highlight of the
first quarter was the paaawork of the
Swarthmore forwards. One of their
best was from one of the centers to
a forward who, running back, re-
versed it again to the center, only to
receive it beneath the basket lor an
easy overhand shot.
In the second quarter the Bryn
Mawr guards seemed unable to get
their passes through, but continued
their excellent work of blocking long
passes and breaking up dribbles. Al-
though Longacre was unable to gel
the tip-off, her password and thai of
Remington, who practically ran cir-
cles around her tall but slower oppo-
Miss Park Announces
Foreign Fellowships
Different Atmosphere Will Open
Up New Possibilities to
Students Chosen to Go
33 CUM LAUDES IN '32
Stuart Chase to Talk on
American Economics
Can We Regain Our Prosperity
or is Present Depression "The
End of An Epoch"
ANALYZES IMPARTIALLY
ing neither a beginning, a middle or Bent, gave Boyd two close-in shots
and One to Collier from the foul line.
ahead, nor can it use its former tac-
tics in India, Manchuria, and Ge-
neva. "I see no future for West-
minster as a vital force, if we do not
change our foreign policy. Tariff also
requires bold solutions, but party
leaders simply quarrel about it. A
tariff wall will not cure unemploy-
ment any more than it has in Amer-
ica, and is just another attempt to.
muddle along." Attempts to change
in minor way are doomed to failure,
for only public control of the main
industries, imports, and exports would
be a basis for employment.
"The present struggle at Westmin-
ster is just as keen if not keener than
in the seventeenth century. The pow-
ers that be in Great Britain will not
(Continued on Page Two)
College News Election's
The College News takes great
pleasure in announcing the fol-
lowing elections:
Sallie Jones, '34, Editor-in-
Chief.
Clara Frances Grant, '34,
Copy Editor.
Janet Marshall, '33, News Ed-
itor.
Mabel Meehan, '33, Business
Manager.
Eleanor Yeakel, '33, Sub-
scription Manager.
an end. A play selects some, moment,
holds its clarity, begins, develops and
ends it in order, so that the function
of the theatre is "fixing our attention
on each moment of life as it passes."
In Btage designing one cannot just
invent a set by putting some furni-
ture in a room, but if one thinks about
the play, the set will grow complete
in one's mind. School* of design are
too apt to theorize about expression-
ism as a factor -cparalo from the
play itself. One must realize that as
the characters in the play have stories
attached to them, so the room they
live in must have the "shape of the
person who lives in it." Someone said
very truly that "a room gets full of
The Swarthmore team began to
realize that it had something to lace.
Although Seaman made two � long,
clean shots which never even touched
the rim, the momentary spurt was
checked bv .Moore when she jntor-
Oli Monday evening, April 11. Air.
Stuart Chase, noted economist and
author of ".Men and Machines......1'he
Nemesis of American Business," etc.,
will lecture in the auditorium of
Goodhart Hall. Mr. Chase will give
his audience answers to many (pies
lions of the moment.
Shall man be slave or master of
the machine'.' Where is the present
age leading US? We have achieved U
mechanical mastery almost undream
ed of. Man is master not only of the
sui face of the earth; of the sea. but
he has conquered air, time and space.
He has gone to the bottom of the
ocean and inside the earth. ,No bar-
rier seems too great for the man of
today to overcome. Telephone, tele-
graph, radio. Wireless, are at our
service. But are they at our serv-
icv'.' l�o the mechanical contrivances,
"Change in the most useful spur to
study that we have at our disposal,"
said Miss Park at chapel Friday
morning. Most of us are reluctant
scholars but manage somehow to fin-
ish the assigned reading and write
our reports. The desire for a prize
whips many students toward the goal,
as well as � strong inherent instinct
to advance. The most important
stimulus t�> learning, however, is'
change, as provided for by the For-
eign Fellowship. Although it is of-
ten difficult to study under shifting
conditions, a > different atmosphere
opens up new possibilities. As Dr. Flex-
ner said, "Foreign universities make
us use our wits." They awaken us
to fresh values and knock all shal-
lowness and immaturity out of us.
We are treated as independent and
learned scholars and come in contact
with foreign people, diets, and cus-
toms.
It was for the purpose of providing
this broader intellectual outlook that
the Delaware Foreign Student Plan
was evolved. The sophomores who
are to study at the Sorbonne next
year are: Jean $. Anderegg, Mary
K. Boyd, Halla Brown, Mary �"��.
(harlton, Margaret G. Dannenbaum,
Klizabeth Fain. Helen G. (Jill, Mar-
garet L. Haskell, Marion G. Mitch-
ell. Myra Little, of the Class of
1933, will join the group and take*
her junior year with them.
Although it is not until graduation
day that the name of the senior chos-
en as the Bryn Mawr European Fel-
low is announced, here is the list,
comprising one-third of the class, ot
those who now possess cum laude av-
erage-: Amelia .Margaret Alexand-
er-en. Helen Qraham Bell. Margaret
Eleanor Bradley, Monica Brice, Vir-
ginia Butterworth, Edith Ashworth
Byrne, Charlotte Beatrice Einsiedler,
Donita Ferguson, Josephine Could
cepted a long pass which resulted in I the inventions, the machines, w..H.
placing Boyd in a scoring position] for us -or we for them?
Her basket was soon followed by a in his answers to such question:
udeline shot of Collier's, which ended and the discussion -of sucB tinielj
the half with*a score of 20-10, Bryij subjects, Mr. Chaw wastes no. time' Gratoni Elizabeth Luciemay Hannah.
Mawr leading. f _''" theorizing. He is the practical , Alice '|,,.(, Hardenbergh, Elinor Rose
conomist, leading as through n won [ Hntneld, (Catherine McClelland, Ruth
derland of factB which seem almost K,,,,,v|es Milliken, Kate Louisa Mitch-
impossible. In his lecture-, covering j c]]( Harriet Lucy Moore. Gretchen
many years of careful research, ho | Bright Mm Her. .lane Marion Oppen-
I!i vn .Maw i
In the second half tin
team came to life and began to show
some of the excellent training which
they had made so evident in th<
Drexel game. The guards did some
human patterns," so thai designing I splendid work, and Boyd was in top
is composing "in human qualities as! ,-,�.,� Collier did not play her usual
well as in form and color." j .,t(.;1(|y shooting rjame, but did some
excellent paS8ing. Longshore's splen
neither attacks nor defends, but �u'>* huimer, Dorothea Eckfcldt Perkins,
mits a brilliant analysis of causi and . Florence Pettus, Elizabeth Pleasants,
Tin- more strongly an artist, wheth-
er writer or designer, feels the signifi-
cance of his play, the more vividly he
can make his audfefieC eoit,'Tso,
though we -cannot form a picture of
heaven, we see it i:i "Green Pasture
because Marc Connelly saw it so feel-
ingly in his imagination.
effect -with Suggestions as to tm
future.
T- his interest in our present prob
did guarding for Swarthmore pre-, lems, Mr. (has,- bring- not Shaw, Jane Elizabeth Sickles, Vir-
wmted Boyd THojii making many �f �"t'v�: v :'""' '"" "" "" ginia Herndon Sped. Patricia Hill
her famous back twists, but EnVscTu'c usiipl technieaTTraTaiug and a varied Stewart. Margreta Curtis Sw. n- a,
Self-Government Meeting
Makes New Amendments
At the meeting of the Seif-Govcra-
ment Association Thursday. March
1,7, it was voted that for an overnight
absence a^student shall have notified
her hostess of her intended arrival.
The resolution against climbing in or
out-of windows was omitted. A res
olution was passed to the effect that
students must be in by 10:30 and that
entering or leaving the ball alter
10.30 by any means other than the
front door shows flagrant disregard
of this regulation. Article XIII was
amended to stipulate that if a stu-
dent, after leaving the halls, finds
out before 10.30 that she wishes spe-
cial permission, she must telephone
for a member of the Board and* have
herself signed out; if a student after
10.30 finds that she is unavoidably
delayed, she must notify the Warden.
A motion that the hours for informal
dancing be changed from 12.15 to
2.00 was carried. To make the reso-
lutions conform more closely to the
purpose of the organization it was re-
solved that each member of the asso-
ciation is responsible for seeing that
(Continued on Page Two)
at the end of the second half ended
33-18, in favor of Bryn Mawr. Tip-
biggest game of the season bail beon
won!
The Bryn Mawr guards are to be
Congratulated for their work in the
second half. Seaman. Swarthmore'
high-scoring forward, was held to a
total of only six points for the whole
(i ',,ni ii.ii. d Mi. l '.i. ' 'I'in. i
expern nee
which enabli
write with "lllti
linn t<
rc?t ant
Eleanor George Renner, Alice Whit-
comb liider. Lucy Coburn Sanborn,
Enid Constance Saper, Ellen Hand
p ak and
authority.
His subject on April 11 will he
"The End of An Epoch?" Has Amer-
ica reached the end of her prosperity
formula'.' is the current depression
permanent or temporary'.' What do
we have to ilo to keep prosperity
-roing?
T3"-
pnee of ticket- for adults i-
$2.50'and for children and all stu-
Plans Progressing Brilliantly for May Day;
Low Prices and Special Trains for Guests*
The May Day Committee- which, as ^acation you should know certain
you all khQW, is composed or Mr. | facts which will Be contained ii. the
King, Miss Petts, Harriet Moore and | folder,
myself�wonders where the catch is
this year, because everything is going
so beautifully, and we hope that the
oatcb is not going to be the weather
or the sale of tickets.
About the weather, none of us can
do anything; but about the ticket sale
we can all do a great deal, and that
is what I want to ask you to help us
with during the vacation � not the
actual sale of tickets, but to so in-
terest people that when they get the
May Day folder, early in April, with
the great number of enclosures, they
will immediately fill in and return the
order for tickets. It has seemed im-
portant that before leaving for the
.he
2...0'
dents, in schools and in colleges, Si.all.
This is a 50-cent reduction on any
May Day admission price since 1900.
Grandstand seats will be sojd M in
1924 and 1��28 at 75 cents, and, while
they may be considered in the light
of a' luxury, yet, if it is a fine day.
the view of the dancing on the green
offered by the grandstand is well
worth this additional expenditure (and
please tell this to your friends and
family).
May Day will be given on Saturday,
May 7, rain or shine, from 2.30 until
(Continued on Pa*a TwoV
Florence Ely Taggart, Charlotte i'y-
'ler. Ann Mai lack We.-gai
l he following are :b fi How-hips
given to certain graduate students
who show great distinction in their
iiiosen iiek|s. to enable tin oi t" con-
tinue their efforts with the help ol
the resources offered by foreign unj-
vei>itic>: The Workman Fellow for
1932-33 i- Elizabeth Ross Foleyj ol
Hamilton. New York. (>bcrli>./ Col-
lege 1929; M. A Bryn Mawfc Col-
lege. I'.'-"". 6arom Woerishoffer Schol-
ar in Social Economy, Bsyn Mawr
College, 1929-30; Carola/Woerishof-
fer Fellow in Social Economy, 1930-
.11; and Grade Dodge /Fellow in So-
cial Economy, 1931-3JB. Miss Foley,
who is working on/a thesis dealing
with workers' education, will study
psychology under Professor Cyril
Burt at the University Of London,
and the methods and technique of the
great English settlements such as
Toynbee Hall, and the Cerman resi-
dent workers' schools.
The Mary E. Garrett: European
(Coafiiiued on 1'nge Throe >
Erratum
The article on the Glee Club
f* concert in The News of March
16 was specially contributed by
Miss Laura Richardson, Reader
in Music.